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 Fans of 1970s reggae are sure to rejoice at the chance to hear Jimmy Cliff and Joe Higgs talk about their music, to see hyperkinetic  producer-musician Lee "Scratch" Perry at work in his legendary Black Ark  studio (with Junior Murvin, the Heptones, and the Upsetters), and to enjoy the lively sounds of the Mighty Diamonds, Ras Michael, and U-Roy in  concert. Fans of Jamaica's best-known musical export, Bob Marley and the  Wailers, may be a little disappointed, however, because the documentary includes  only a couple of brief performance clips--though, granted, even momentary glimpses of Mr. Music at his peak are better than none at all.
   This 1977 installment of director Jeremy Marre's 14-part Beats of the  Heart series also features early black-and-white footage of Jimmy Cliff and Toots & the Maytals in concert, the Gladiators in the studio, and the  Abyssinians, Third World, and Inner Circle in rehearsal. Scenes of Kingston street life are interspersed with the performance footage and interviews to illustrate the narrator's claim that "Reggae music is much more than  entertainment in Jamaica today. It's a powerful social force that mirrors  the pressures of everyday life, putting them into words and rhythm--describing, revealing, persuading." --Kathleen C. Fennessy
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